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    Ryan Ellis’s hipcheck on Flyers’ Wayne Simmonds is awesome; but was it clipping?

    Ryan Ellis and Wayne Simmonds teamed up to treat us to one of the hits of the year Saturday night. Early in the second period, with the Nashville Predators leading the Philadelphia Flyers 1-0, Simmonds came flying down the left side, and tried to cut inside on Ellis, his man.

    Ellis wasn't having it. While he initially looked to have overplayed Simmonds's dash down the wing, he made a deft recovery, stopping up and throwing the hip as Simmonds made his move to the middle. The result was this:

    You've got to love a hit that sends a guy ass over teakettle. The Predators and their fans certainly did. From the Tennesseean:

    "It was kind of something that happened in the moment," Ellis said. "He tried to cut in; it was a good move by him, but obviously I got in his way. I'm just a small guy, so he went over top of me."

    The play seemed to ignite the announced sell-out crowd of 17,113 at Bridgestone Arena and the Predators players.

    "That was awesome, just a one-on-one play," goaltender Pekka Rinne said. "Just a strong play by (Ellis). It was a key play. He had a long reach — Simmonds — he was trying to go around him. Just an old-school hip-check, and fun to watch."

    All this said, when I shared the hit on Twitter, a number of people were quick to observe that the principle point of contact appears to be the knee area, and my first instinct upon seeing the hit was to agree. Isn't this clipping?

    Clipping was only called a few times in 2011 (albeit twice to Keith Ballard, who can get a bit low), but with Brad Marchand's five-game suspension, the penalty has definitely gone mainstream. Expect flippy hipchecks of this sort to see an increased level of scrutiny going forward.

    So what's the difference between Marchand's hit on Sami Salo and this one?

    There are certainly similarities. Marchand and Ellis are both diminutive guys. Marchand is 5'9", Ellis is 5'10, and their victims, Salo and Simmonds, are quite a bit taller -- Simmonds is 6'2" and Salo is 6'3". In both cases, it could be argued that the hitter's small stature contributed to the lowness of the hit.

    But there are differences between the two plays that explain why one garnered a five-gamer and the other garnered little more than oohs and aahs.

    The first thing to remember is that Marchand wasn't suspended simply for the clip. He was suspended because Brendan Shanahan deemed it a predatory play. When you mix the descriptors "predatory", "injurious" and "the work of a repeat offender", you have a recipe for a lengthy suspension. Take away Salo's concussion, Marchand's discipline record, and Marchand's gloved punches to Salo in the seconds prior to the hit, and the punishment is likely far less severe.

    But still, the officials didn't even look twice at this one, not even for a two-minute minor. Why?

    The second thing to remember here is how clipping is defined:

    44.1 Clipping - Clipping is the act of throwing the body, from any direction, across or below the knees of an opponent.

    A player may not deliver a check in a "clipping" manner, nor lower his own body position to deliver a check on or below an opponent's knees.

    Judging by this criteria, Ellis's hit isn't clipping. Why? Ellis doesn't lower his body position to deliver this check to the knee area -- Simmonds raises his body position. In his attempt to get around Ellis, he jumps, and both of his skates are off the ice at the moment of contact. Here's a screenshot:

    Simmonds's great leap forward

    As an aside, Wayne Simmonds has some long, skinny legs. He's like the drummer in that Supergrass video. Anyway.

    It's hard to see from this angle, but if you watch the play in real-time, you can see Ellis attempt to compensate for Simmonds's hop by standing up a little to ensure that he connects with the waist. He clearly succeeds somewhat too, as Simmonds pops out to the side rather than up and over his head.

    In short, this hit is clean, legal and, therefore, awesome. Feel free to watch it multiple times.

    Follow Harrison Mooney on Twitter at @HarrisonMooney

     

    27 comments

    • Codey H  •  4 months ago
      Not clipping, at all.
    • Logan  •  Oakland, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
      Oh hush Bruins fans, this isn't like the Marchand hit except for the fact that a player was sent flying. I can see the Shanahan video now "Simmons changes his body position just prior to the hit..."

      Love Simmons (and this is coming from a Devils fan), but it's his sudden change that causes the hit to be so awesome. Otherwise he might have just been knocked off the puck, or even knocked Ellis down as he's so much bigger.
      • matthew 4 months ago
        I'm not seeing any Bruins fans complaining here. I'm a Bruins fan and I can clearly see that this was a clean check. I think you'll find too that after Marchand#$%$ albeit a few overzealous homers (which every city has), most fans knew Marchand was going to get something.
    • Chris L  •  4 months ago
      No way should this even be considered clipping... the fact that Simmonds went flying was more his own fault than Ellis... he tried to jump over him for some reason.... I've said it for a long time... most of the time guys get hurt by trying to avoid a hit...
    • Pwny Danza  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  4 months ago
      Ellis is gonna be a great D-man!
      • John Black 4 months ago
        When he gets traded away from a hick team
    • B C  •  4 months ago
      Not even close to clipping? So not close, that why is this even an article?
      • B C 4 months ago
        Wow, that was a big fail on my part. It should have read:

        Not even close to clipping. So not close as matter of fact, that why is this even an article?
      • Daniel 4 months ago
        Because a certain segment of Bruins fans want to compare it to the Marchand hit which was blatantly clipping. Not all Bruins fans by any means, but there are certainly some out there.
      • Thanatos 4 months ago
        The article is to explain why this is not a clipping play, given that casual hockey fans (and Boston homers) may see a hip check penalized in one instance and not another.

        It's informative. It's educational. And your comment is a pointless whine.
    • mikepick  •  New York, New York  •  4 months ago
      Bruins fans really are the 1%ers of hockey. So much wealth and so quick to complain.
    • Joshua  •  4 months ago
      It's all good.
    • Baz  •  Buffalo, New York  •  4 months ago
      Great hit and you're absolutely right, it should NOT be called clipping because Simmonds jumped into him.
    • Matt  •  Cicero, Illinois  •  4 months ago
      Not clipping, but lowering the boom baby
    • MattD  •  4 months ago
      Clean hip check. Simmons leaving the ice removed the danger to his knees.
    • Jesse  •  Sacramento, California  •  4 months ago
      Simmer always does that jump/hop around players.
    • Nima  •  Kuwait City, Kuwait  •  4 months ago
      Simmonds jumped up as ellis puts on the brakes. even so, the difference between ALF and Ellis is the absence of malice.
    • Mojo Tooth  •  Petah Tikva, Israel  •  4 months ago
      You had me at Supergrass
    • Dima  •  4 months ago
      Good analysis. This is the same reason that the beautiful Ovechkin hit on Subban last season was also not clipping.
    • Jeffro  •  4 months ago
      Mooney's trying to make something out of nothing---again.

      Not clipping. And the only reason why Ellis' poorly executed hip-check was noteworthy is because Simmonds tried to jump over him like Ellis was Giroux, but he didn't quite get high enough this time to get a knee on Ellis' noggin.

      I'm more impressed that Simmonds gets right back-up and immediately picked his stick up like he hardly missed a beat. The video doesn't show it, but Simmonds soon got back into the action and pick-pocketed the puck away from a Predator to keep the puck in the Preds' zone, which also was impressive. And Simmonds never got shook-up. He was even able to score a goal later in the game.
      • Amans 4 months ago
        My advice to you is to read an article to its conclusion before commenting. Mooney uses the hit as the starting point to explain the differences between a legal hip check and a clip. It is a well written article, it's a shame you didn't spend your time reading it instead of posting that off-base comment.
      • Jeffro 4 months ago
        You should change your name from "Amans" to "Amateur".I read it, and I never claimed it wasn't a written article. Furthermore, I agreed that it wasn't a clip. So much that it was the very first thing I wrote. Seems like YOU didn't read MY comment before replying.And show me the rules which says my comment cannot digress---marginally like mine, or to any other degree for that matter---from the subject at hand.Clear it up any? If not, then my advice to you is to #$%$ off before making snide remarks about anybody's comments, Amateur!
      • Jeffro 4 months ago
        If not, then my advice to you is to #$%$ off before making snide remarks about anybody's comments, Amateur!

        "#$%$ off" rhymes with "bug her off". Dang Yahoo filter!
    • steven  •  4 months ago
      BEAUTIFUL HIT
    • the artist  •  Providence, Rhode Island  •  4 months ago
      it wasnt an issue because the flyers , unlike the canucks , play like men which means they can take it like men also . if this were the canucks player #$%$ over teakettle , you could be sure that he'd be out a week with a " concussion like symptoms" which is why i only watch original 12 match-ups with out the whining from the canuck coaches. bring back old time hockey , ...........cocncussion prevention rules are in place and concussions are on the rise, bring back the broad street bullies , the big bad bruins, the rabid rangers.......... old time hockey eddie shore , it was tougher , better and safer when men played the game
    • Max Zorin  •  4 months ago
      Brad Marchand clips a guy, and every hipcheck will now be viewed as a potential clipping penalty. The Witch hunts continue in the NHL
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Windsor, Canada  •  4 months ago
      A true Leo Boivin or Bob Plager style hip check! Great to see a defenceman checking with skill rather than ramming a player's head. Good on Ellis. Bravo.
    • Shawn  •  Richardson, Texas  •  4 months ago
      obviously you don' know what clipping is..

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